Very nice!!! That 4th one looks like it could be near Bayview Junction.
cheers
Val
My first comment was, "Wow, a lot of green." Then I got to the last picture and realized they were all Photoshopped as somebody put way too much Woodland Scenics grass and turf on the tracks. The smoke is very convincing though.
Looks like someplace I'd like to visit... or move to.
Really like the first shot with 2 slug sets. Can I add one of my best shots from Hamilton:
Nice pictures guys! Thanks for sharing them.
CN Nutbar, I'm a little late here but thanks for posting the great photos. When were these taken? I wish I had known about that location the last two times I was in your wonderful country, now I have 4 good excuses to come back.
Charlie
Nice pictures cn nutbar. Thanks for posting them.
It looks like Hamilton is a great place for railfanning.
CN 7100 has a very unusual look ( at least to me )
Jacques
Jacques, the 7100 is a "Sweep", a combination of an SW1200RS and a Geep. In this picture, the 1364 is an un-modified SW1200RS, while the 7104 is another "Sweep". CN called the 1700s SW1200RMs, while "Sweep" is a railfan designation.
Here's another sister, the 1706, showing the cab end. Both pictures were taken by Mister Nutbar, by the way.
Wayne
Look at all that Canadian content. I like it.
Here's even more "Canadian content", and it's also connected to Hamilton, Ontario.
These stone support piers, at Twenty Mile Creek, near Jordan Station, once carried the tracks of the Great Western over the valley. The Great Western was a Hamilton-based line which once had over 800 miles of track, connecting Hamilton with Toronto, Niagara Falls, Windsor, and the Bruce Peninsula. Built in 1853, it was absorbed by the Grand Trunk in 1882 and later became part of the CNR.
This former Great Western station, in Grimsby, Ont. is now use as a pottery and antiques shop. It was moved back from the tracks when a newer station was built, and has seen several uses over the years.
Hamilton's other "own" railway was the Toronto Hamilton & Buffalo. Based in Hamilton, the TH&B reached Toronto via trackage rights on the CNR, and made it to Buffalo over NYC lines. Controlled by the CPR and NYC, then by only the CPR after the creation of Conrail, it was later absorbed completely by Canadian Pacific. Still surviving is the art deco-style Hamilton station, now in use by GO Transit commuter trains.
Wayne
What the heck?
SW cabs on GP frames?
Hmmmm......Kitbash!